Craig Ringer <craig(at)postnewspapers(dot)com(dot)au> writes:
>> prices=# \d abapsql(11407) malloc: *** error for object 0xe: pointer being
>> freed was not allocated
>> *** set a breakpoint in malloc_error_break to debug
>> Abort trap
> This could be a bug in psql, a buggy/damaged readline library, etc.
> ...
> I don't have access to Mac OS X 10.6, but maybe someone else here does
> and can reproduce the issue.
It's fairly easy to reproduce in the regression database:
type "\d ten<TAB>". I'm not sure what the triggering condition
is exactly, because some seemingly-similar cases don't fail,
for instance "\d test<TAB>" works as expected, ditto "\d t<TAB>".
Stack trace looks like this:
regression=# \d tenpsql(16771) malloc: *** error for object 0xd: pointer being freed was not allocated
*** set a breakpoint in malloc_error_break to debug
Program received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
0x00007fff83652886 in __kill ()
(gdb) bt
#0 0x00007fff83652886 in __kill ()
#1 0x00007fff836f2eae in abort ()
#2 0x00007fff8360aa75 in free ()
#3 0x000000010009b9a8 in fn_complete ()
#4 0x00000001000a1416 in rl_complete ()
#5 0x00000001000a1428 in rl_complete ()
#6 0x000000010009fb87 in el_gets ()
#7 0x00000001000a19bf in readline ()
#8 0x00000001000083ff in gets_interactive (prompt=<value temporarily unavailable, due to optimizations>) at input.c:76
#9 0x000000010000bfdb in MainLoop (source=0x7fff705a30c0) at mainloop.c:134
#10 0x000000010000e6d4 in main (argc=<value temporarily unavailable, due to optimizations>, argv=0x7fff5fbff510) at startup.c:305
The object address is nonreproducible (varies even in seemingly
identical test runs), but it's always a very small integer, 1 to 0xd or
so.
Since this doesn't happen on any of my libreadline-using boxes, it seems
like a fairly safe bet that it's a bug in libedit, rather than us using
the library incorrectly. You can try to get Apple to take an interest,
but there's not much we can do about it.
I concur with Alvaro's suggestion to install GNU readline instead of
depending on libedit.
regards, tom lane